Pubdate: Sun, 12 Mar 2000 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: Telegraph Publishing Company 2000 Contact: P.O. Box 1008, Nashua N.H. 03061 Website: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Author: Pamela Constable, The Washington Post DEADLY HARVEST BENEFITS OPPOSITES Anti-drug Taliban and farmers reap money from trade none say they want. KANDAHAR, Afghanistan AD As clouds of acrid smoke billowed into the air and an Islamic cleric chanted verses from the Koran, nearly 10,000 pounds of confiscated hashish and 800 pounds of heroin went up in flames surrounded by banners that read, "Down With All Kinds of Drugs." The torching ceremony last week, attended by Afghan and United Nations officials, was aimed at convincing a skeptical world and a reluctant nation that authorities here are serious about fighting drugs, even though opium poppy production has soared to record levels since the conservative Islamic Taliban regime took power in 1996. The country is now the world's leading supplier of poppy and its addictive derivatives. "This is not just symbolic. It is something we take very seriously," said Abdul Hameed Akhunzada, who heads the Taliban's anti-drug commission. "We are 100 percent determined to control drugs, but we cannot do it alone. This problem existed long before the Taliban, and we need much more help from the outside world to solve it." But two hours' drive east across the desert, in a mud-walled village where acres of new green poppy plants were sprouting beside wheat fields, calloused and illiterate farmers made it clear why reducing poppy cultivation and opium production in Afghanistan faces stiff resistance. The men expressed gratitude for the irrigation wells and flood dikes built by the U.N. Drug Control Program in their district, and enthusiasm about the wheat seeds and apricot seedlings donated to encourage them to switch crops. But they also said poppy requires less water, grows faster, produces more profit and is easier to sell, since buyers always appear at the village gates at harvest time. "We don't like poppy, but we are poor, and we have to grow it to feed our families," said Mullah Janan, 25, a farmer in the village of Sekander, where poppy crops provide year-round work from planting, weeding and lancing poppy bulbs to collect opium sap. "Wheat gives us food, but poppy gives us money to buy tea and medicine and other things we need. Without it, the people would not survive." According to the most recent U.N. survey, Afghanistan produced an unprecedented 4,600 metric tons of opium last year. The number of acres under poppy cultivation rose 43 percent, and opium output increased by at least 70 percent. The estimated value of the total raw crop was $183 million, and 97 percent of the poppy fields were in territory controlled by the Taliban, which is still fighting pockets of armed resistance in the north. Western law enforcement authorities have noted that the Taliban collects a 10 percent tax on all farm products, including poppy, and the authorities believe it also profits from the extensive drug trafficking network in the region. With the country economically devastated after 20 years of war and burdened by international anti-terrorism sanctions, they say, Afghan authorities have little incentive to curb this cash-rich crop. But Taliban officials said this week that they recognize and condemn the pernicious impact of drug use abroad, and they stressed that it is strictly prohibited by Afghanistan's Islam-based law. They also appeared eager to reduce their international isolation on such issues, and they have cooperated closely with the U.N. Drug Control Program in its efforts to motivate poppy farmers to grow alternative crops. Five months ago, Taliban religious authorities called for all farmers to reduce their poppy cultivation by one-third. The Kandahar governor also has ordered a 50 percent reduction in this region, which produces 75 percent of Afghanistan's opium. Last month, officials banned the collection of civil and religious taxes on hashish, which is made from hemp, and heroin. "When a person is intoxicated, he cannot worship God, so it is completely forbidden under Islamic law," Gov. Mohammad Ahsan Rahmani said during the burning ceremony. "Poppy growing has continued because of our weak economy, but it is the policy of the Islamic State of Afghanistan to ultimately eradicate its cultivation and use." Accusations that the Taliban profits from drug taxes, Rahmani said, are "lies and foolish propaganda of the enemy." Like other Taliban officials, he drew a sharp distinction between poppy, which is legal to grow in Afghanistan, and its addictive derivatives, which are banned. The traditional tax on poppy, he said, is a "historic phenomenon. The money does not go to the Taliban, it goes to the mosques to help poor relatives and neighbors." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson